Garlic, acupuncture and hydrogen peroxide: The crazy things we do to try to stay healthy

I might soon be getting a cold. My back is sore, my head is achy and my energy is zapped. The virus hasn’t fully settled in my lungs or made a home in my sinuses, but I have a feeling that I will soon be a victim of the cold and flu season. Then again, maybe I won’t. I may have just enough time to kick this thing before it even gets going.

Everyone knows there’s no cure for the common cold, but what about preventing it? It turns out there may be as many theories for staving off illness as there are colds in the U.S. every year (the answer — over 1 billion colds move among us annually). We are regularly offered scientific evidence about what does and doesn’t help prevent colds. A study published just last month in the Journal of Clinical Virology found that school-age children are vehicles for some of the most severe cold infections. On the other hand, reporters have jumped all over another paper published October 3 in the Journal of the American Medical Association, which found that regular vitamin D does not reduce the incidence of upper respiratory tract infections. Does this mean that you should put down that vitamin bottle and step away from the runny nosed kids? While you might be tempted, it’s really too soon to conclude from these studies that exposure to children will make you sicker, or that you gain nothing from taking vitamin D.

On the more creative end of the spectrum there’s Gene Stone, who published a book in 2010 called “The Secrets of People Who Never Get Sick.” Tired of frequent colds and frustrated by traditional medical remedies, Stone turned to the real “experts” — the people he never saw get sick — and asked them what their secrets were. The answers range from the mundane (wearing a turtleneck on chilly days, eating raw garlic) to the dubious (closing the toilet lid before flushing, acupuncture) to the outrageous (dunking your head in hydrogen peroxide every day or even eating your own snot — supposedly to introduce pathogens into the immune system). There is almost nothing Stone’s subjects haven’t tried.

Then there are the standard preventive measures: washing your hands; doing aerobic exercise; eating green, red, and yellow fruits and vegetables, which are full of phytochemicals like lycopene (in the news most recently for helping prevent strokes).

Chances are there will never be a definitive answer on how to prevent a cold, but there are certainly some smart things you can do to try and nip it in the bud. As for me, I’m going to make sure I get some good sleep, eat healthily and, my favorite trick, stay away from the bar. I’ll skip the snot-eating, though.